DECEMBER 9, 1948 L'atest Russian Move Makes Agreement On Berlin More Difficult BERLIN. Dee s - (AP) - The ‘Skis’ fur Health Communist putsch splitting Berlin is interpreted here to mean Rus- sis does not intend to compromise its cold war against the west. Oustinl the legally-elected city government from the Soviet sector and s “‘ up a puppet, t; “n. ist regime makes it immeasurably more dllffcult for the west to come t0 ugr ement with the Soviets over the Berlin blockade. The west refuses to discuss the German problem as a whole as long as the Soviet blockade continues. Thus tihere can be no settlement over divided Genmany. Without a settlement on Germany there can be no political peace for the rest o: Europe. Setting up s separate Commun- ist regime for Eastern Berlin mak- es it virtually impossible to put into affect any settlement over the so- skis," demon- strated by five-year-old Judith Ann Garth. a spastic, are _one of the neu~~=t development; in ortho- pedlc eqiiiplnclit. They were de- monslialcrl at the National So- clety for Crippled Children and Adults convention in Chicago. These “walking Community Chests Campaign Results OTTAWA, DEC. 8 - tCPi — Thanks to "Red Feather" most of Canaan"; private welfare services will have enough money to carry them through another year. Eltilv results in the recent Red Feather Community Chests carn- paigu here announced today by the Cflllljlllllllly Chests‘ Division, Canadian Welfare Council. A iota‘. of 37 clicsis held cam- paiizris lllls fall and i6 oi the 24 that sect ju results passcd their- ohjcctiw- The remaining eight sent hryoiirl the 90 per cent. mark. Chrsts reporting so tar have raiscd nearlv $7,000,000. \'i'iili I15 pcr cent of its object- ive iii liwtl and more money com- in: 1n Mccfe Jaw has raised $28.- TIT. The. Oshawa, Ont, chest passer! its objtctiin for the ninth succes- sive drive this ywar exceeding Its roal ‘v: llll per cent, with I101,- 723 l-‘avcd \\'llll rising costs of food. Plellilns. rival. rent, most of the chests tlial ffissftl ther gong; in- diciite that the increase in oney is only eitabllng them to mcei llltllviii: cxponsrs. Chests passing their objective lite l-‘cticratioii of Catholic Chari- ties, Alcntrcal. and the Montreal Wvliate Federation report that the monrv raised will make new ierviccs yacssible, Chests nt Halifax, Londrn, Ont, include: Montreal Federation of Jcivish Phllanthrooies. $363,260; iioiitrcal Wclfare Federation, 8i.- Mtmireal Flcderatlon of Loo CHAINS * reduy and make your sslee- * TIRES ‘k ELECTRIC CLOCKS i REAR VIEW . MIRRORS "- Li" OIIIIGII Si. it 4t A. a, i, s a_ Accessories . . . from Chains to F0 Just who! the cur owns ‘ like. yetsemerlilng he wouldn t think of receiving. called currency question-tr any is reached in Paris by the United Nations. Any currency agreement for the city would have to be under four- power ccni/rol. There are no four- pcwer bodies now functioning. The Soviets had withdrawn from them. Allernately‘ a four-power agree- ment reached ln Paris might be presented to a German administ- ration to administer to the citiy as a whole. But there is no single administ- ration. There are two, the Soviets have set up their own. The Russians could interpret and administer any Paris agreement as they say fit in the eastern sector. Their separate Ccmmunlst ad- ministration could at the same time wreck any western attempts w ad- minister the currency agreement in the three western sectors cf the city. To try to dissolve the two city governments arid set up one to aid- mlnister any Paris agreement brings up more fundamental quest- ions than raised thus far at Paris. Either the west would have to repudiate all or part of the freely elected government in its sectors or the Russians would have to throw out all or part of their Commun- ists regime. The likelihood of either happen- ing is one in a thousand. Thus. while still negotiating at Paris, the Soviets in Berlin have made certain that any United Nat- ions agreement elther can be sabot- aged or twisted completely in their favor. There is no indication that France, Britain and the United States would be willing to accept an agreement under such condit- ions To Improve Taste 0f London Water LONDON, Dec B -~ (C?) - lnndoners learned recently that the taste of their chlorinous-tast- ing water is to he improved. The Metropolitan Water Board gave much space in its 1947-48 re"- port to explain it is often impos- sible to produce ‘satisfactory’ water free from objectionable taste. This. the board said, was because there is little time for the beneficial disinfectant action of the chlorine to be completed before the water is drawn by con- sumers. ' , But it ls promised preparations now are well advanced for "contact tanks" to be provided at filtration stations where chlorinated water will be held up for two hours and sterilized before being distributed Britons Still Iiave Dreams of Land of Plenty '- By lonaid MacLurkin LONDON. Dec. 8 - (Reuters)- Thres years after the end of the Second world War the dream of every Briton is still a land where people can buy as many eggs as they want, eat as much meat as they can hohi, and purchase ban- anas off any street fruit barrow. Food remains the most persistent topic of conversation in every Brit- isn hccne, and Britons see no pros- pect of rationing ending for years to come. Since the end of the war they have grumbled more at the deadly dullness of their fare than at the meagre quantity of it. And. near the end of i948, the dullness is an even greyer shade than in 1945.. The points system. under which each person is allotted 24 points a month with which to buy tinned foods and delicacies. for some time saved the ration from unrelleved monotony. But now the government drive to save hard currency has cut down imports of tinned food- stuffs. Former standbys such as tinned baked beans. steak-and-kidnei’ puddings and dried eggs are not easy to get. Almost all that can be obtained with points are cheeses. tinned soups and spaghetti. The basic ration per person looks shockingly meagre when put on a plate. This, with variations irl the tybt‘ of meat, goes to feed one person for a whole week: Two lamb chops. two rashes-s of bacon, one shell egg. four ounces of marzlllflt" three ounces of butter. one ounce cf cooking fat, one small slice of cheese. two ounces of tea. and half s pound of sugar. Potatoes now are off the ration and vegetables are Dlflnmul though much more expensive than before the war. lfish is unratloned and abundant. ‘Most families spend their rations in one grand spree at week-ends. leaving the vest of the week to tare care of itself. Libel Action By An M. P. LONDON. Dec if -— In the King's Bench Division on Thurs- day the jury retumed a verdict in favour of the defendants lh the action in which Mrs. Elizabeth Margaret Braddock, MP... of zig- zag Road, Liverpool. claimed dam- ages for alleged libel from Tillot- sons Newspapers. Limited, the proprietors, printers. and publish- ers of the Bolton Evening News Mrs. Braddock complained of the. following paragraph liefldt-‘d "R/evelry by Night“ in the ISSIIP of that newspaper of MM‘ l. i947: - "fri the middle of this unlovely burlesque. Mrs. Braddock. who represents the Exchange Division of Liverpool, danced a lig on the floor of the l-louse finishing in the seat. vacated by Mr. Churchll, our greatest llc-use of Ccvnmons mm The whole performance was naus- eating, a sorry degradation of democratic government. by discus- sion. the nadir. let us fervently hope. of this Parliament." lvfrs. Braddcck. who denied that she had danced a’ jiiz or had sat in Mr. Churchllls seat, said that the words complained of meant and were understood to mean that she behaved in an undigni- fled and unseemly manner, and had been guilty of disorderly More than one tank should be op- erative this vcar providing non- chlorine tasting water. I run GAR 0WIIER$ Christmas Giff line of Auto Everything g-Llghts, king for u . See our lien. SEAT COVERS r. n. MeLA r would Seep In breach of the rules governing the ___________~ tContinued 0n Page l9) _____.___.______ HEATERS Heaters to Dsfrosrers . . . k DEFROSTERS can x0855 d’ MIRRORS i BATTERIES Phone S60 THE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN Retl Iisiiger 0| u» siiiiu mm 'u;s."s'.' u. s. s. s. DoIIi-nlztel Chinese Communists M“ line N‘ emTgslsilrslr-s Communist tide In sa colonies areas of France, Great Britain and the yum“ ese people will be lllldl. without which those nation bleed ourselves 11ft, 1 “ S "Y “l” i" kWP "P the home countries," declare; Rep. Waller Judd, of’ ivfnnesota. v“'°-l'~" “is Judd. "then a line mountains from Fuklen westward. Illustrates the situation with Communists In control f ti; (gm ' o nor m, II. S. Appears To llave Lost Faith In iihlang By JM. Roberta, J1’. China Sea Associated Press News Analyst Washington's tactics 'in the Chinese situation suggest that the United States Government has giv- en up hope in the Chlang Kai- Shek regime and is awaiting politi- cal developments in Nanking be- fore attempting any real effort to stop the Communists. The assumption. apparently, is that Chiangs Inability to obtain the support of the Chinese people makes it impossible to use his gov- ernment as agent for any real counter-offensive, and that seme- thing is bound to happen Pb him soon. There is. on the other hand, not the slightest indication of any American move to speed Chang's downfall. The attitude seems to be one of disappointed resignation and watchful waiting. Seldom in diplomatic history has the lid been kept quite so tightly on a D Tl ( China is a threat in the rich south. ' "flnw "mrvl" "N! We will on "if _ . . Chi I u pi M M“ ‘e Yum" States must step in with food and t l . gggdiugigirgilthvglfiiiaigg ‘he peope lock — locks would conform with lgliltlt be established through the at is our frontier." Map, above, "w mimcmn.’ damn" "net "Id "l! llerilous location of tl tI re sou least Asln colonies. . New Freight Service Link With MONCTON. Dec 8 - A new. fast manifest export and Import tltiilv ffviithl service between Maritimes ports and Central flllfi Western Canada for Canadian shippers and Importers was announced here to- flfll’ hi’ Edgar A. Robertson. general superintendent of transportation Atlantic Region, Canadian Nation. al Railways. "\\|'0_|_l1_l\'c Iiecn investigiiiitig iilc possibilities of stepping up our fFPigIlf. service hciwecn Halifax illlfl Saint John and Montreal and west for some litue." Mi". Robertson iolrl ncwsmen. "1 believe we have worn. cd out n service which will he zi llflflfl In Iloth ilic Mnrlflnics ports and ilic shippers of export and irri- port traffic." all!‘ "iteration of a first import ficiglit train tllrect from Halifnx and Saint John io Montreal will no Into effect immediately. said Mr. Robertson. 1t. will permit n second morning dPll\'(‘l‘_\v n; Hus ‘rm-fie In lilonireul and will speed up {Ip- lil/Plll’ l0 western points by 3.; hours. Mr. Robertson also RflnQunpgr] the establishment. of another new C-NJR. freight service for shippers of export freight from ilic Lake St. John district mid along the Norfh-. ern St. Lzuvronce River. It will be operated on a' fast schedule to ltloncicn, where it will ninke quick connection for the ports f $1 John and Hullfax. o a m Earlier this mmmh m, said‘ the the town, some 3'35 iriiles from C.N.R. established another new M"m"9“l' freight train service {m- smppers The port. uscrl chiefly to ex- of export traffic to the hint-trims; ports of Halifax and Saint John from Western and Central Canada This train operates on a through- iMt schedule to Moncton with im: mcrlinte handling of this freight to Saint John and Halifax, Free Ilse 0f ' Tracer Atoms Offered Industry BY ‘MOUGLAS HOW OTTAWA. Dec 8 — tCPJ-‘hude Minister Howe today offered in. dlllifl’ a year's free u-se of radio- zsotopes or tracer atoms from the Chalk River atomic plant and lat- er said a second crowri- owned uranium fleld is moving near the production stage. His offer was an effort to spur Canadian industry forward in use of what was described as “the first great contribution of atomic energy to peacetime purposes“ and the greatest research moi sine; the microscope was invented three centuries ago_ His (tenement about the uran- ium fleld was later described by a government atomic official as somewhat over-expansive at the moment. Mr. Howe told a re- porter he would rather not say where tho field is located, other than that it i-s not in the North- Maritimes Saguenay River‘ Town Grows In Importance PORT ALFRED, Que. Dec, 3 .._ ICPI — Port Alfred. already rated Canada's sixth largest port. is (u- banding. So far as Port Saguenayt River is concerned it is a small. typical French-Canadian town with a population of 3,500 and most of the people are farmers or work at the docks. But when the talk is of ports and busines. handled and possible expansion ill the future, then Port Alfred folk get volublc in their company toivii many hundreds of miles from the open sea. For next year their iteiv $3,500.000 wharf will m finished to aid in an already large export-import. bus- iness bnsed entirely on the alum- Alfred on the the sin-rounding panel’ inllls. - Font Alfrctllaiis claim the two present wharvcs have been sadly overworked in handling 20,000 tons of cargo a yeah-Tire new wharf is expected to brine; expansion for port material from the Aluminum Company of Canada's Arvida plants and surrounding paper mills, is operated by the Saguenay 'l‘ct"miiials fffllllliilll)’. which handles all shipping for the aluminum company in the area. Export Business Some 85 per cent of the ports business is exporting - to South] America, Newfoundland and Texas. The remainder" is importing mat- erials necessary for the various companies. The large increase in storage and clock facilities has been niatlc necessary by unprecrdenwd peace- time activity in Arvida. More than 336 ships passed through stevedores‘ hands here during the current season and the addition of the wharf will pro- bably mean that the amount of tonnage to be handled next year will increase. In Port Alfred. there are few stores-only enough lor farmers and workers to obtain their week- ly supplies. The town was established some years ago, but did not come into prominence until i920 when the] first wharf was built. Then in i937 ‘ a second wharf was constructed. When the shipping season is, closed-from December to April-ii all exports are handled by rail and ‘ taken to the nearest open port for shipment. ...___.._..i____. IURS BY Allt JOHANNEBURG — fCPi South Afrlcrs karakui industry has ‘- l I l -‘ l wrest Territories. site of the El- dcrsdo mine which ranks behind the Belgian Congo as WP Dro- duoer. It was believed, however, to be s Northern Saskatchewan field which, the official said, now is in an advanced stage of exploration but wihlch cannot yet be defin- itely tabbed" as of a stature wor- (Continued On Page i9) grown wings. in, the season just‘ ended, one firm has down 40-000 pelts worth £200,000 t 00,000l to the Londommarket. Shipping by air rather than by boat saves time. and it is expect -‘ that ostrich and ,wool farmers will soon be doing Madame Chiang. The general ex- she won't get much, if anything. literary career out of her familiar- ity with China tbut who apparently does not view Communism with as much alarm as do most experts ject.) also seems that Chiang's government is about. through. Chinese cannot set up a new gov- ernment for themselves; that they can act only by rejection. Then a ‘as she is, has lnum indlsiry of Arvidti. Que, and" visitor of such importance as ectation in Washington is that Pearl Buck, w-ho has made a and the Chinese on that sub- In a recent article she says the to be assumlngjwsls- New Power On. St. Lawrence Proposed l BY DOUGLAS HOW. OTTAWA. Dec. 8 - (C?) _ Without making any promises, the Government released today an engineers‘ report outlining four Bllernfltlre protects for muulti- million dollar developments 0g either or both the power and Yldvlsation of the Lachine Rapids section of the St. Lawrence Rive; Transport Minister Chevrler telling a press conference they hould “eventually" he considered uy the Cabinet, said they could come to mean a tremendous source of hydro power -- 1,200,000 horse- power — on Montreal's doorstep and a deepened. 27-foot route that would give access to Central Can- ada to the iron ore from Labrador and Northern Quebec. The report affects one of the five sections of the proposed St. Laurence waterway and brings it up to date with studies on the international section farther up the river. Specifically a review of a i926 Study. it was made by a five-man board headed by R. A. C. Henry. head of the Air Transport Board, with Quebec hydro engineers mak- ing the study and estimates of The proposed alternatives: 1. Improvement for navigation alone by building a new deep- water canal and providing Victoria rAuis 'l‘HIRTEEN_ ‘ Development Bridge and other bridges with a ew nationalist coalition may be formed to include present opposit- ion. Or a group of men may emerge she does not say Either way, she says, the Chin- "ovide. Then. she says. the United This would all be very nice. of lift span over it. The canal would skirt the river's north shore be- tween Lachine and Montreal liarbor and would have two locks . v l would be Communistswlhiiiillltaerwhlilli 859 rest long‘ B0 {Get wide and 30 gfigilriolvlvlgrselves View“ and as‘ double the depth cf the present feet deep at the sills, more than Latlhlne canal. Cost: $B7v3l'5,000. 2. A new canal with full practical suits which the govegrirritigrrftdlwigllrli; °"°‘°pm°“‘ °' p°“""- a“ “mm” too helpless and inexperienced to installation of 1,200,000 l-l.P. hydro- electric generating capacity. This could be done in two ways: ta) Construction of a single those of the Welland ship canal - below Victoria Bridge to over- course. But the United States, rich wme a difference m water levels. limited Talk of shipping enough will over the like talking of enough buckets to ball the ocean. If a new government is formed in Nationalist (Thins the United States can do a lot to help “ help Itself. but that's about all. Drug Injections By Pressure Jet TBSOLI PC65- food to LOTDON, Dec. 8 — lCPl —- A new method of injecting drugs by a high-pressure jet wiihoutsyringe or needle is described in the British Medical Journal. It. is based on the fact that an extremely line high-pressure jet of liquid can pierce the skin without pro- ducing pain. Shaped like a large flashlight the injection instrument forces the liquid, under pressure varying from 2,300 to 3,500 pounds per square inch, through the skin. It is claim- ed that the jet injection “causes no pain and saves considerable lime." If the skin is wet however. or is tilted, the lITjQCLLOIT produces a tut and sometimes a blister. It cannot be used for carefully- placed injections or for the in- jection of oily liquids. "Perhaps the greatest drawback at present is the cost of the ap- paratus." the Journal says. "Jet injection is, however, the first basic change in Injection technique for nearly 100 years." 47 YEARS OLD ‘ The Chinese Republic was found- people of China is u Construction of a railway tunnel nder the canal and river is suggest- ed. A dam and powerhouse would be built 3,000 feet below the bridge with dikes on both sides of the river and control works at the head of the rapids and at the out- lets of the Lake of Two Mountslrg. This would mean diversion f c. N. R. traffic from the bridge to the tunnel. It would cost 3256.114,- Elizabeth Bentley. self-confesses member of a Communist spy ring, who repented and exposed the es- pionage activities of her former comrades in a congressional in- vestigation, is s-fioivn just befcrl she spoke in the Christian cul- ture lecture series at Aquinas 1n- stltule. Rochester. N. Y, M1“ Bentley recently followed the ex- ample of Louis Budenz arid em- braced Catholicism. , Minister Who Broadcasts In Gallic EDINBURGH, DEG. 8 —- Th} Rev. George NM, Oolllns, 3.13‘ minister of Free St. Oolumbals Church, Edinburgh, has been nominated as Moderator of the next General Assembly o: the 000 with an extra $19,000,000 if a Free ghm-ch 0; scouanop four-track tunnel tinder the river and modification of Victoria Bridge Ifor vehicular traffic was approved. I ibl one below the bridge and the would handle bot-h traffic as it does now. would mean considerable trackage on the north shore. Cost: $266,249,000. Cost: $2l3,942,000. Mr. Chevriei" called with his several years rcnce waterway’ proposals were closely linked. al section of the seaway be available early in i949. A similar project except that it would have two locks, one above, powerhouse would be located 3.500 feet below the bridge. The bridge rail and car This one ,.e_ but. removed in his early youth arrangement of rail switches and his "lmahel"! "all"? [JP-Tish 0f Asa the report “one of the most interesting" din Frog Gaelic Church, Greencck gn the e- ‘ pal-intent. The Government would eventually decide which of the alternatives it favored biit he saw era] and has m?“ entrusted n ‘no immediate haste“ because of “rm to “m, Mm Th “l. any developments in the St. Law- e Convener with which the cnmmmpki Ml’. Chevrier said both Canadian and United Siaics engineers were studying costs of the internation- under current conditions. Reports should The Moderator - Designate’. family connection with the Freq Church aces back to the Dlsrupa lion of i043, his maternal greist- great-granclfather. Alell Malcleod (Bfliul of A-ssvnt. Sutherland, having been one of the outstand- ing men of that period, Mr. Collins was brrn in Loni-i 5W". Lat". he returned to Lon; don with a view to taking u,‘ 3. A power project alone re- Wulllflllfim Rs a career, but fin; talnilig the present canal with its 511V fltfilflctl f0 study for the mine limitation of l4 feet at the sills. l-Stfi‘ of the Free Church. Since his ordination in i923 Collins has ministered first in y, since 101m. in Free st, comm, has. He has taken a full share in ‘he ‘Willi 0T the Church in gene ships of several of the sfnndjn Although not n native Ggellq streak-er, Nil‘. Collins achieved- dig- the late Professor W.J. Watson o1 mini-Mirth University, and ha; irctiiicntly preached and lectured :n the Gaelic programmes of thg BBC. He has twice gone cs1 Wnol is the largest single source trrcavhiiz: enissions to» exiled Scots of Australian national wealth, The. in Canada and the United states sheep population nu-mbers 103.000,- Since 1923 he has been clerk of ed m 1g11_ ()()()_ m‘ the Southern Sincd of the Free = i l T ' t I: S | S A O YES MEN, WE HAVE OVER 500 TO CHOOSE FROM, ‘a ANY STYLE OR COLOR, EXPERTLY TAILORED I FROM ALL WOOL IMPORTED YARN DYED WORST- E EDS BY SUCH FAMOUS TAILORS AS HART, TIMES SQUARES AND CROWN. ALL LE$$ 20 OLD BETTLEZTEEN 1‘ 'I‘he first colonization of Puerto Rico by the Spaniards was in 1508. MOST COMPLETE STOC REGULAR PRICES: $39.50 - $49.50 - $57.50 - $69.50 % 0I$00IINT OVERCOATS PICK YOUR OVERCOAT FROM THE LARGEST AND K IN TOWN - SHOWN IN HEAVY ALL WOOL FLEECES — MELTONS AND VELOURS ALL SMARTLY LEADING TAILORS. TAILORED BY CANADA'S REGULAR PRICES $20.50 - $30.50 - $49.50 ALL LE$$ 10% 0I$00IlIIT Use Our Convenient Lay Away Plan TIIE GREEIIDAL 00. LTO. IlIEII'$ and BOYS’ WEAR I